Lubomyr
Luciuk, PhD his most recent book is In Fear Of The Barbed Wire Fence:
Canada's First National Internment Operations and the Ukrainian Canadians,
1914-1920(Kashtan Press, 2001). Complemented with over 50
b&w photos, an index, footnotes, bibliography, teacher's guides, 3
appendixes, this book deals with the experiences of Ukrainian Canadians
and other east Europeans during a period of international and domestic
crisis.http://openlibrary.org/b/OL3599856M/In_fear_of_the_barbed_wire_fence

Searching For Place: Ukrainian Displaced
Persons, Canada, and the Migration of Memory (University of Toronto
Press, 2000),http://www.infoukes.com/bookstore/luciuk/searching_for_place.htmlLuciuk explores how the Ukrainian community
in his hometown of Kingston, Ontario came to be as it is. He looks at the
origin of the community beginning in 1891, and traces it through the two
world wars when armed Ukrainian nationalists battled first the Nazis and
then the Soviets, and the postwar efforts of Ukrainians to convince the
west to make an independent Ukraine a priority. Dr. Luciuk serves
as director of research for the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
Professor Lubomyr Luciuk also teaches geography at the Royal Military College.